Dealers striving for premiums over MSRP today reminds me of the launch of original NSX.
Initially "market premiums", then unsold inventory, then discounting.
In the big picture the biggest stakeholder in the new NSX venture is Honda with investment in the design of the car, and plant and equipment to build it.
Secondly are the customers who laid out $175 K plus on the new NSX
Thirdly are the dealers who have laid out $120K (per Hot Honda) for NSX specific service equipment.
It would seem the best thing for the stakeholders (Honda, the new customers, and the certified dealers) would be for Honda to announce shortly that the initial allocation of NSXs has been sold and no new orders are being accepted for the moment, and a new allocation will be forthcoming.
This approach would protect the value of new NSXs being manufactured beyond the initial order file, protect the investment made by initial buyers and the dealers.
In short all the stakeholders who have a vested interest in the value of the new NSX are being protected.
Dealer's playing around with premiums are effectively raising the retail price of the NSX which will reduce demand.
Reduced demand will hold back the sell out of the initial allocations.
An unsold allocation would likely result in dealers having to back off their "market adjustments" and go back to those alienated customers, trying to make a sale.
The end result, no aura of exclusivity for the new NSX, bad publicity, alienated potential customers (a boon for Porsche, Audi and so one), and ultimately a perception of an unsuccessful car.
If that point is reached Honda will not sell their planned production, prices will become soft, and all the stakeholders will lose something.
Honda Corp can survive a losing NSX and a certified dealership would only lose profit on a small volume seller plus their equipment investment.
I'd suggest the stakeholders who will take the biggest value hit, and who can least afford it, will be each new owner.
And this is the same scenario as what happened with the first NSX buyer who paid MSRP plus at the launch and took a huge value hit a few year later.
I hope I am wrong but I am seeing much more risk in purchasing a new NSX today than a month ago, and had hoped Honda would manage this launch better.
Initially "market premiums", then unsold inventory, then discounting.
In the big picture the biggest stakeholder in the new NSX venture is Honda with investment in the design of the car, and plant and equipment to build it.
Secondly are the customers who laid out $175 K plus on the new NSX
Thirdly are the dealers who have laid out $120K (per Hot Honda) for NSX specific service equipment.
It would seem the best thing for the stakeholders (Honda, the new customers, and the certified dealers) would be for Honda to announce shortly that the initial allocation of NSXs has been sold and no new orders are being accepted for the moment, and a new allocation will be forthcoming.
This approach would protect the value of new NSXs being manufactured beyond the initial order file, protect the investment made by initial buyers and the dealers.
In short all the stakeholders who have a vested interest in the value of the new NSX are being protected.
Dealer's playing around with premiums are effectively raising the retail price of the NSX which will reduce demand.
Reduced demand will hold back the sell out of the initial allocations.
An unsold allocation would likely result in dealers having to back off their "market adjustments" and go back to those alienated customers, trying to make a sale.
The end result, no aura of exclusivity for the new NSX, bad publicity, alienated potential customers (a boon for Porsche, Audi and so one), and ultimately a perception of an unsuccessful car.
If that point is reached Honda will not sell their planned production, prices will become soft, and all the stakeholders will lose something.
Honda Corp can survive a losing NSX and a certified dealership would only lose profit on a small volume seller plus their equipment investment.
I'd suggest the stakeholders who will take the biggest value hit, and who can least afford it, will be each new owner.
And this is the same scenario as what happened with the first NSX buyer who paid MSRP plus at the launch and took a huge value hit a few year later.
I hope I am wrong but I am seeing much more risk in purchasing a new NSX today than a month ago, and had hoped Honda would manage this launch better.